Choptank River Lighthouse - Sepia
by Brian Wallace
Title
Choptank River Lighthouse - Sepia
Artist
Brian Wallace
Medium
Photograph - 2d Digital Image
Description
The Choptank River Lighthouse is a replica of a six-sided screwpile lighthouse that guided mariners along the Choptank River for generations. The replica was completed in fall 2012. It's located on the end of Pier A at Long Wharf Park (Water and High Streets) in Cambridge, on Maryland's beautiful Eastern Shore. In 2014, the lighthouse is normally open to the public for free, self-guided tours daily from 9am-6pm, from May 18 through October. Off-season, visitors can see the lighthouse by appointment by calling 410.228.4031. The lighthouse includes a small museum, with exhibits about the original lighthouse's history and the area's maritime heritage, as well as the City of Cambridge dockmaster's office.
The Choptank River Lighthouse once stood between Castle Haven and Benoni Points on the Choptank River, near the mouth of the Tred Avon River. The lighthouse station was established in 1871 by the U.S. Lighthouse Service, a government agency that later became today's U.S. Coast Guard, the service which still manages America's navigational aids. The lighthouse was the only manned lighthouse inside the Choptank River to guide ships to Cambridge, and farther up-river to Secretary and Denton. In the late 1880s and early 1900s, steamboats passed the lighthouse regularly, sailing from Baltimore and stopping at Long Wharf for produce, seafood and passengers. Many older residents of Cambridge remember the pleasant overnight trips to and from Baltimore past the Choptank River lighthouse.
The original lighthouse at the Choptank River Station was built in 1871 at Baltimore's Lazaretto Lighthouse Depot, moved on a barge to the site and loaded onto the iron skeleton legs which were screwed into the substrate of the Choptank River. An ice floe in 1918 demolished this first structure. Instead of building a new structure, the Lighthouse Service elected to move the spare Cherrystone lighthouse then in storage at Cape Charles, Virginia, to the Choptank River Station. The Cherrystone lighthouse was put in place in 1921 at the Choptank River site, making it the only lighthouse in the Chesapeake that has served two states. The structure, pictured here, stood at the station until 1964, when the house was removed under the Coast Guard's modernization program. Today at the site there's a small flashing light to guide boaters.
History of the Choptank River Lighthouse...
The Choptank River lighthouse in the Cambridge marina is a replica of this last lighthouse, utilizing existing plans available from the National Archives. The hexagonal cottage style house stands on pilings similar to its namesake screwpile network of "legs" on a platform at the end of Pier A at the Cambridge City Marina. The footprint of the structure is 42' from one hex point to the other, and sits on a 60' by 60' platform with an overall height approximately 40'. The lighthouse is visible by water, greeting boating visitors to the marina. It can also be seen from the Choptank River bridge and the nearby city.
Uploaded
March 7th, 2017
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Viewed 861 Times - Last Visitor from Ottawa, ON - Canada on 04/22/2024 at 3:16 PM
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Comments (14)
Connie Raynor
This is a gorgeous capture of the Choptank River Lighthouse and would make a beautiful canvas! l/f
Brian Wallace replied:
I'm glad you like it Connie. Thanks for the comment and L/F. I appreciate it.
Luther Fine Art
Congratulations,! Your artwork has been Featured by the - ABC Group with the theme R IS FOR RIVER. You are invited to archive it in the Feature thread LF
Brian Wallace replied:
Thanks LFA, for the nice comment and feature in the group, https://fineartamerica.com/groups/abc-group-.html
Brian Wallace
Thanks Lenore Senior, for featuring my work in the group, http://fineartamerica.com/groups/old-masters--photographers-and-digital-arts--1-a-day.html
William Tasker
Very cool treatment makes this a wonderful image! L/F
Brian Wallace replied:
Thanks William, for the nice comment and the L/F of my work. I appreciate it as always! :)